AI builds your ad from a single prompt

May 27, 2025
40%
More branded searches
25%
More listing appointments
$750/mo
Monthly ad spend
Kenny Patton had the skills. Twenty years in real estate, deep community roots, and a track record of successful transactions. What he didn't have was visibility.
"I was competing against agents who had been advertising on Zillow and Realtor.com for years," Kenny explains. "Every lead I got from those platforms was shared with five other agents. I needed people to call me first."
TV advertising offered something different: the chance to become a recognized name in his target neighborhoods before homeowners ever thought about selling.
Kenny's target market in suburban Atlanta included roughly 15,000 households. Plenty of opportunity, but also plenty of competition.
The landscape he faced:
Over 50 agents actively working his target area
Zillow and Realtor.com dominated online lead generation
Every portal lead was sold to multiple agents
Word-of-mouth alone wasn't scaling fast enough
Direct mail had diminishing returns
"I was spending $2,000 a month on portal leads," Kenny says. "I'd get the lead, call immediately, and still find out two other agents had already reached them."
Real estate success is built on recognition. When a homeowner decides to sell, they typically contact an agent they already know or trust. TV advertising accelerates that.
Trust factor: Appearing on TV lends credibility that digital ads can't match
Local targeting: Reach households in your specific farm area
Frequency builds familiarity: Regular exposure creates the "I know that agent" effect
Differentiation: Most agents aren't on TV, so you stand out immediately
Kenny's approach was straightforward: show up consistently in living rooms across his target ZIP codes.
Campaign parameters:
Budget: $750/month ($4,500 over 6 months)
Targeting: 4 specific ZIP codes in his market
Audience: Homeowners, ages 35+
Frequency: 2-3 exposures per household per month
Impressions: ~120,000 total over 6 months
Reach: 60-70% of target households
"I wanted people to see me regularly, but not so often that they got annoyed," Kenny explains. "The goal was familiarity, not saturation."
Real estate is a personal business. Kenny's commercial leaned into that.
Kenny on camera, speaking directly to viewers
Footage of the communities he serves
Trust signals: years of experience, local roots, happy clients
Clear positioning: "Your neighborhood real estate expert"
Simple CTA: "When you're ready to sell, call Kenny Patton"
"I didn't want some slick, generic real estate commercial," Kenny says. "I wanted people to feel like they were meeting me. Authentic and approachable."
The ad was created using Adwave's AI tools, which pulled images from Kenny's website and generated a professional commercial. Kenny tweaked the script and music, and had a broadcast-ready ad within an hour.
Here's what six months of consistent TV presence delivered:
Recognition:
"I've seen you on TV" became a regular comment at open houses and community events
Better response rates on other marketing (people already knew who he was)
Past clients reached out after seeing ads, generating referrals
Measurable results:
40% more searches for "Kenny Patton Real Estate"
25-30% increase in listing appointments
Better conversion rate (sellers were pre-sold on credibility)
More referrals from past clients who saw the ads
A note on context: Real estate success has many factors. The market, interest rates, Kenny's other marketing, his reputation, and his skills all contributed. TV advertising was one piece of a broader strategy.
"I can't say TV caused every new listing," Kenny acknowledges. "But people started knowing my name before I ever spoke to them. That changes the conversation completely."
After six months, Kenny identified the elements that drove the strongest results.
Consistency mattered most. Running continuously for six months built cumulative recognition. Short bursts wouldn't have created the same effect.
Personal presence was key. Commercials featuring Kenny himself outperformed any approach that didn't show his face. People want to see who they're hiring.
Geographic precision. Tight targeting on specific ZIP codes concentrated impressions where they mattered. Kenny wasn't trying to be famous across Atlanta. He wanted to own his target market.
Complementary marketing. TV worked best alongside other channels. When people saw Kenny's direct mail or social posts, they recognized him from TV. The channels reinforced each other.
1. Set realistic expectations "This isn't a quick fix. You're not going to run TV ads for a month and have listings falling in your lap. It's a brand-building investment that pays off over time."
2. Commit to consistency "If you can only afford one month, wait until you can afford six. The compound effect of repeated exposure is where the value is."
3. Focus on your target market "Don't try to blanket a huge territory. Pick your target neighborhoods and own them. Better to be well-known in a small area than barely known in a large one."
4. Be yourself on camera "People hire agents they trust. Let them see the real you. Professional, yes, but authentic."
5. Budget smart "I spent $750 a month, which was less than half what I was spending on portal leads that I shared with competitors. The ROI made sense."
Kenny's success came from a simple insight: real estate is about being known and trusted in your area. TV advertising accelerates both.
Adwave makes TV advertising accessible for agents at any budget. Create a professional commercial featuring you and your listings, target homeowners in your specific neighborhoods, and start building the recognition that converts to listings.
Your competitors are fighting over the same portal leads. TV lets you become the agent people call first.
See how it works for real estate or create your first ad free.
Results depend on your market, competition, and execution, but the strategy works for most agents. Building local brand recognition through consistent TV advertising helps you become the agent people think of first. The key is consistent presence rather than occasional advertising.
TV builds the trust and recognition that influence who sellers and buyers contact. When someone decides to sell, they often reach out to agents they've seen and heard of. The leads may not come immediately after seeing an ad, but recognition influences decisions weeks or months later.
Focus on building trust and local expertise rather than promoting specific listings. Showcase your knowledge of the area, your track record, and what makes you different. People choosing an agent want confidence in your ability, not just a list of properties.
Online leads are often shared among multiple agents and require heavy nurturing. TV-generated awareness creates warmer prospects who already trust your brand before reaching out. Many agents find that TV improves the quality of all their leads by building credibility that carries across channels.